Every day we climb from bed, we decide how to face the day. Will we
dread it or will we anticipate it? Will we resist it or will we
welcome it?

Few persons have made us as aware of the power of our attitudes as
the late Dr. Norman Vincent Peale. In his book In God We Trust
(Nashville: Thomas Nelson Publishers, 1994), he tells about a woman
he describes as "a nice lady," but "she got all tired out by eight
o'clock
in the morning. And she wasn't even out of her bed by then," he said.
The problem was that she "lay there thinking of all the terrible
things that were going to happen to her, how badly everything would
turn out, how many problems she had, how many difficulties she had to
face - and by eight o'clock, she was so tired she could hardly get
out of bed."

On the other hand, Henry David Thoreau used to lie in bed before
rising and tell himself all the good news. When he arose, he was
ready to meet the challenges before him.

Attitude is everything! It is well said that "we cannot direct the
wind, but we can adjust our sails."